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Industry Commentary Will Cloud Computing Confuse Network Management?
Traditional network management systems focus on measuring and monitoring technical metrics
By: Vikas Aggarwal
Dec. 13, 2009 06:00 PM
Network Management at Cloud Expo In today’s technology-dependent enterprise environment, the efficiency of most business processes depends directly on the effective performance of the IT infrastructure. Almost every single activity - from servicing a customer to shipping purchased products - is dependent upon one or more software applications and the underlying computing/network infrastructure. This demand is already stretching traditional network management tools to the limit, given the universal adoption of multi-tier applications, distributed computing and web technologies in the last decade. The advent of cloud computing, the latest evolution in IT, creates a new set of challenges that require innovative tools to help businesses leverage the cost and efficiency benefits of cloud computing, while mitigating the risks.
Traditional network management systems focus on measuring and monitoring technical metrics and trends of individual nodes and components in the infrastructure. Although an isolated issue in the complex web of new technologies may impact one or more user-facing tasks in a business process, the current monitoring approaches are incapable of determining the business impact of such a problem. In order to ensure the smooth running of business operations in a cloud environment, network management must move away from point monitoring of IT infrastructure to instead monitor business service availability and performance. Network management must go beyond just looking at the performance of individual nodes or components to include a holistic service-oriented view. To ensure greater reliability of essential processes and systems in a virtual environment, Business Service Management (BSM) systems can help enterprises connect business processes with IT operations to achieve a more holistic perspective. By connecting the worlds of IT and business, BSM solutions are able to identify the affected business processes or services when problems occur in the complex, distributed and virtual IT infrastructure. BSM solutions enable preemptive and rapid identification of business issues, accurate identification of root causes and quick resolution of problems. Traditional network monitoring products have made the implementation of BSM solutions a challenge. Older generation network monitoring products are unable to integrate fault/event, performance management and BSM within a unified system, and thus businesses are forced to deploy and integrate multiple systems to get an end-to-end view. This cumbersome approach involves linking multiple disparate applications across different layers and domains of infrastructure and business services. These solutions contain a confusing array of complicated features, require specialized application-specific expertise to install, integrate and manage, and involve execution of complex projects to complete an implementation. All of this adds up to a significant investment in the initial deployment and ongoing administrative support, resulting in extremely high total cost of ownership. Fortunately, innovative solutions have emerged to deliver the advanced BSM capabilities required by the enterprise, pre-integrated with the necessary underlying fault/event and performance management capabilities. These next-generation BSM systems leverage two key technical advantages that enable them to effectively support cloud computing environments. The first, open and extensible APIs or data-capture plug-ins for integrating with external systems, allows for the easy addition of custom monitors to capture availability and performance data from any element within the cloud computing infrastructure, whether it’s a new external web service or a virtual machine. The second, sometimes referred to as creating ‘service containers,’ involves grouping an organization’s IT infrastructure to create logical, business-oriented views of the overall physical and virtualized computing network. The ability to link applications and the cloud computing infrastructure with business services creates service containers that allow enterprise network administrators to monitor for multiple elements of the infrastructure, generate reports on service containers, get uptime information and real-time status for services, and receive alerts if services fail or exceed defined thresholds. Next-generation BSM systems provide the ability to define container severities to support varying business needs and objectives. Users can specify rules to indicate when a container is identified as being in an undesirable state. For example, if there are two redundant network paths between two end points, this can be specified in a business container. If there is a virtual server farm behind a load balancer and an outage of some of the virtual servers does not affect the supported business service, this can also be specified in a business container. Similarly, if there is a single SaaS application that supports the same business service, the business container can be defined to indicate the status of the business service as being ‘critical’ if the synthetic test transaction with SaaS application fails. As mentioned earlier, business processes are increasingly dependent on a complex mix of IT infrastructure and applications that that extend beyond the boundaries of the enterprise network. A new set IT management challenges have emerged in light of the rapid adoption of cloud computing technologies, such as virtualization, grid architectures and SaaS. To ensure smooth business operations, organizations need to deploy advanced BSM solutions that overcome the limitations of legacy network management tools by providing real-time visibility into the availability and performance of business services Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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